Best Careers 2009: Fundraiser

December 11, 2008 RSS Feed Print

Overview. Whether it's for a political party or the Little League, many people like the idea of being a fundraiser, except for one thing: "I could never ask for money." Fact is, only a small percentage of a development (fundraising) professional's time is spent on "the ask."

In fact, the task is often easy if you've built a relationship with the donor and made the donor's involvement in the organization pleasant. Most of a development professional's time is spent recruiting, training, and motivating volunteers, developing a database of donors, conducting research on wealthy prospects to maximize the size of their donations, friendraising ("A Day in the Life," below), writing grant proposals, overseeing E-mail and phone campaigns, and/or running fundraising events, like a splashy gala. The best development professionals naturally inspire trust. They're intelligent but low key and comfortable being self-effacing: That makes donors feel as though they're a cut above. Low-pressure, polished sales managers do well as fundraisers and fundraising managers.

The job market? While the slowing economy portends lower donations, to date, hiring of fundraisers has continued to grow.

A Day in the Life. As a development director for a college, you probably have among the campus's most plush offices—the college wants its rainmakers and donors to be comfy. Your morning might start by reviewing prospect dossiers—corporate executives and other fat cats you'll visit in person. Each dossier, compiled by a staff researcher, identifies the prospect's hot buttons: Is he a sports nut? Then you can hit him up for money for the new football stadium. Is she passionate about the environment? Explain the dire need to expand the library's collection on environmental studies. After brushing up on wills and trusts, off you go to meet your prospects. Both say no, for now—but that's OK, because "friendraising" is often a necessary prerequisite for fundraising. Back at the office, you review the plan for the annual campaign, which includes telemarketing scripts, direct-mail pieces, and "Dinner With the Profs," a meeting between big donors and the school's best instructors. Finally, you review your website's traffic numbers and work on a plan to tweak the site so it generates more donations.

Salary Data

Median (with eight years in the field): $66,000

25th to 75th percentile (with eight or more years of experience): $54,900-$92,700

(Data provided by PayScale.com)

Training

Generally, fundraisers are trained on the job, although they may take training offered through such organizations as the Association of Fundraising Professionals and the Foundation Center .

Smart Specialty

Fundraising for Green Organizations. With environmentalism the Green Giant of causes and America's fastest growing religion, this niche may offer one of the easier routes to landing a good development job and to raising money.

Fundraising for Arts Organizations. Working for a museum, symphony, or theater group allows you to have a life in the arts without becoming a starving artist.

Prospect Researcher.

Learn More

Tags:
careers

Reader Comments Read all comments (34)

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

Anyone who pursues a career in fundraising with the idea that they will never have to 'ask' is being set up for failure. You absolutely have to build strong relationships, but these are not just friendships - these need to be productive partnerships built on common social goals - and it takes great skill to connect prospects to the possibilities they can effect, and to understand and respond to a prospects unique set of motivators. It's essentially a highly specialized form of sales and I promise it's not easier, however gratifying, than traditional profit based sales. Remember this if nothing else: You have to A-S-K to G-E-T. Anyone who tells you otherwise is not telling you the truth.

mauricecullen 8:41PM September 11, 2011

What an encouraging article! After 20+ years working in advertising as a copywriter - then a lay-off! - plus as many years participating in the arts and community activities, this looks like a great career transition for me. I am starting the UCLA Extension Certification in Fundraising program, and I am so excited. Watch out!

Ellen Lutwak @Name Girl of CA 1:21AM June 16, 2010

I would like to know how a person gets into fundraising for major nonprofits? It appears to be a field that requires one to be an experience professional from the start.

This looks like a really fun career. I like the idea of taking people out to lunch, playing golf, and event planning while raising money for a good cause.

Tia of CA 3:04PM April 21, 2010

Jobs That May Interest You

advertisement

U.S. News Rankings & Research

U.S. News delivers quality analysis and clear objective rankings to help you make informed financial decisions.

Advance your career with an online degree

advertisement